How To Make Miso Ramen With Ivan Orkin

In 2007, Ivan Orkin, a middle-aged Jewish guy from Long Island, did something crazy. In the food-zealous, insular megalopolis of Tokyo, Ivan opened a ramen shop. He was a gaijin (foreigner), trying to make his name in a place that is fiercely opinionated about ramen. At first, customers came because they were curious, but word spread quickly about Ivan’s handmade noodles, clean and complex broth, and thoughtfully prepared toppings. Soon enough, Ivan became a celebrity—a fixture of Japanese TV programs and the face of his own best-selling brand of instant ramen. Ivan opened a second location in Tokyo, and has returned to New York City to expand his ramen empire.Ivan describes his first ramen experience as “excruciating painful.” It took place in a down-and-dirty, classic, sticky, hole-in-the-wall, down a small alley somewhere in Tokyo. The miso ramen he had has the hottest broth of all ramen broths. Miso broth is around 200 degrees and apparently, needs to eaten when it’s boiling and inhaled quickly. So Ivan did just that and thank God he did. Now you too can have a "excruciating" miso ramen experience at home. And check out the full demo here.
IVAN ORKIN'S MISO AND PORK RAMEN RECIPE
(serves 2)

Ingredients:

Miso base

100 g red miso

100 g white miso

40 g sake

30 g oil

20 g honey

30 ml pork fat (or oil)

Meat mix

25 g chopped onions

10 g chopped garlic,

10 g chopped ginger

50 ml oil

200g ground pork

20 g miso mix

Soup

4 liters chicken stock (store bought low sodium OK)

1 lb pork neck bones

1 lb ground pork

Method:

For the miso base:

Combine the miso, sake, oil, honey and cook together in a pan for 10 minutes in a non-stick pan over medium heat. Reserve. (This can be done up to 5 days ahead of time)

For the meat mix:

Saute the ginger, garlic, and onion in the oil for 5 minutes until softened. Add the ground pork and cook over medium heat until fully cooked. (about 5 min more)

Add 20 g of the prepared miso base, cook for 5 more minutes. Reserve. (This can be made up to 3 days in advance)

For the pork soup:

Combine the pork bones, ground pork and the chicken stock and bring to a boil. Skim off the scum that rises to the surface.

Boil very hard until you have about 700 ml of soup left. If it is low, top off with more chicken both.

Strain, reserve. (This can be done 3 days in advance)

Burnt garlic oil This is an incredible condiment and is great on anything!

1 C canola oil

1 C sesame oil

3 T Sambal chili paste

100 g whole peeled garlic cloves

Method:

Combine garlic and canola oil and cook slowly over medium high heat until it starts to burn. This will take about 30 min, stir occasionally until the garlic is evenly black and when tapped with a spoon, sounds hard and hollow.

Cool mixture, and blend very well in a blender.

Add sesame oil and chili paste

(This can be made a week in advance)

To assemble the dish:

Add the remaining miso base to a pot and add the soup. Boil together very hard for 5 minutes. Keep HOT!

In a separate pot, bring 4 liters of water to a boil for the ramen noodles. (You can use dry noodles from instant ramen, or better yet, find thick ramen noodles in an Asian market)

Warm the meat mixture gently in a small pan.

Have 2 warm bowls ready.

Boil the noodles until just done. Shake off all excess water and drop noodles in the 2 bowls.

Add 270 ml of piping hot soup to each bowl of noodles. Gently stir together with chopsticks.